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      Insight into the Binding of DFG-out Allosteric Inhibitors to B-Raf Kinase Using Molecular Dynamics and Free Energy Calculations.

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          Abstract

          B-Raf mutations are identified in 40-50% of patients with melanoma and among them, the substitution of valine for glutamic acid at position 600 ((V600E)B-Raf) is the most frequent. Treatment of these patients with B-Raf inhibitors has been associated with a clear clinical benefit. Unfortunately, multiple resistance mechanisms have been identified and new potent and selective inhibitors are currently needed. In this work, five different type II inhibitors, which bind (V600E)B-Raf in its DFG-out conformation, have been studied using molecular dynamics, free energy calculations and energy decomposition analysis. The ranking of calculated MM-PB/GBSA binding affinities is in good agreement with the experimentally measured ones. The per-residue decomposition of ΔGbinding, within the MM-GBSA approach, has been used to identify the key residues governing the allosteric binding of the studied compounds to the (V600E)B-Raf protein kinase. Results indicate that although van der Waals interactions are key determinants for binding, hydrogen bonds also play an important role. This work also provides a better structural understanding of the binding of DFG-out inhibitors to (V600E)B-Raf, which can be used in a further step for rational design of a new class of B-Raf potent inhibitors.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Curr Comput Aided Drug Des
          Current computer-aided drug design
          1875-6697
          1573-4099
          2015
          : 11
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Physical Chemistry, University of Barcelona and the Institut de Recerca en Quimica Teorica i Computacional (IQTCUB), Barcelona, Spain. jaime.rubio@ub.edu.
          Article
          CCADD-EPUB-68478
          10.2174/1573409911666150702100245
          26135342
          12e13568-3f3b-4a5a-895e-88e0d81e63ad
          History

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